Schleyer Titus, Spallek Heiko, Hernández Pedro
Center for Dental Informatics, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2007 Jul-Aug;14(4):515-26. doi: 10.1197/jamia.M2335. Epub 2007 Apr 25.
Approximately 25% of all general dentists practicing in the United States use a computer in the dental operatory. Only 1.8% maintain completely electronic records. Anecdotal evidence suggests that dental computer-based patient records (CPR) do not represent clinical information with the same degree of completeness and fidelity as paper records. The objective of this study was to develop a basic content model for clinical information in paper-based records and examine its degree of coverage by CPRs.
We compiled a baseline dental record (BDR) from a purposive sample of 10 paper record formats (two from dental schools and four each from dental practices and commercial sources). We extracted all clinical data fields, removed duplicates, and organized the resulting collection in categories/subcategories. We then mapped the fields in four market-leading dental CPRs to the BDR.
We calculated frequency counts of BDR categories and data fields for all paper-based and computer-based record formats, and cross-mapped information coverage at both the category and the data field level.
The BDR had 20 categories and 363 data fields. On average, paper records and CPRs contained 14 categories, and 210 and 174 fields, respectively. Only 72, or 20%, of the BDR fields occurred in five or more paper records. Categories related to diagnosis were missing from most paper-based and computer-based record formats. The CPRs rarely used the category names and groupings of data fields common in paper formats.
Existing paper records exhibit limited agreement on what information dental records should contain. The CPRs only cover this information partially, and may thus impede the adoption of electronic patient records.
在美国执业的所有普通牙医中,约25%在牙科诊疗室使用计算机。只有1.8%维护完全电子化的记录。轶事证据表明,基于计算机的牙科患者记录(CPR)所呈现的临床信息在完整性和保真度上不如纸质记录。本研究的目的是开发纸质记录中临床信息的基本内容模型,并检查CPR对其的覆盖程度。
我们从10种纸质记录格式的有目的样本(两种来自牙科学院,四种来自牙科诊所和商业来源)中编制了一份基线牙科记录(BDR)。我们提取了所有临床数据字段,去除重复项,并将结果集合按类别/子类别进行组织。然后,我们将四种市场领先的牙科CPR中的字段映射到BDR。
我们计算了所有纸质和基于计算机的记录格式的BDR类别和数据字段的频数,并在类别和数据字段级别交叉映射信息覆盖情况。
BDR有20个类别和363个数据字段。纸质记录和CPR平均分别包含14个类别以及210个和174个字段。BDR中只有72个字段(即20%)出现在五种或更多纸质记录中。大多数纸质和基于计算机的记录格式都缺少与诊断相关的类别。CPR很少使用纸质格式中常见的数据字段类别名称和分组。
现有的纸质记录在牙科记录应包含哪些信息方面的一致性有限。CPR仅部分涵盖了这些信息,因此可能会阻碍电子患者记录的采用。